#Learn Excel and Word
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tccicomputercoaching · 21 days ago
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everythingilearned · 2 years ago
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Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure (1989)
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hazzybat · 1 year ago
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The boys learn tucking is a real thing. Yes that kind.
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grandtreeangel · 7 days ago
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Power of love cover (08.25.07)
at Corn Exchange, Edinburgh
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not-so-superheroine · 21 days ago
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harry kim is not from south carolina. someone is lying.
that man is californian.
star trek, you can't just say that someone is from somewhere, okay. you have to show it!
garrett wang wasn’t selling it. he wasn't trying to sell it. i guessed he was from california, and i was right because harry kim comes off as very californian.
bones is from georgia. and he is a bonifide mint julep drinkin' georgia man. deforest kelley was from georgia and he knew what he was doing.
but harry kim?
as a south carolinian, no. just no.
it may work for other people (who aren't from south carolina ig), but when i saw he was supposed to be from south carolina, i was damn near offended.
i would have believed tom paris was from south carolina before harry kim.
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dravidious · 1 year ago
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Typing Tips That I Stumbled Upon Randomly:
The Ctrl key lets you jump between words really quickly. If you hold Ctrl and press the left or right arrow keys, instead of moving your cursor 1 character you'll move it a whole word; if you want to edit that word that's 3 words back, you can just hold Ctrl and left-left-left, and you're there.
Even more useful in my opinion, if you hold Ctrl and press Backspace you'll delete the entire word you're on. That's just really nifty because a lot of the time when you're deleting you want to delete the whole word, so this is much faster.
Also, idk how well-known this is but holding Shift and moving your cursor will make you highlight any characters you move over. That's useful on its own, but combining that with Ctrl lets you quickly highlight whole words or sentences, so you can easily copy+paste them. You can also hold Shift to edit any selections you made with your mouse or something.
Also it took me too long to realize that the Home and End keys are actually really nice sometimes. Home takes you to the start of the line you're on, and End takes you to the end. Hold Shift while doing that and you can highlight the whole line. Very nice for programming. Also holding Ctrl and pressing Home or End takes you to the top or bottom of the page, but I barely use that.
A similarly useful key that I also overlooked is the Delete key. It's like the Backspace key, but it deletes the character in front of your cursor instead of behind it. Just like with Backspace Ctrl+Delete lets you delete a whole word in front of your cursor.
Also Ctrl+A lets you highlight the whole page.
Also even when you're not typing and instead just browsing a web page or something, you still technically have a cursor; if you click a piece of text, then hold Shift and press the arrow keys, you'll start highlighting text.
Practice Exercise: Click on the t in this word, then hold Shift and press left and right on the arrow keys! Now try holding Ctrl+Shift while you press the arrow keys! Hold Shift and press Home or End! Hold Shift and use your mouse to left-click on different spots in the paragraph and see how your selection changes!
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eyepatchdate · 6 months ago
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hey whisp hope you’re doing well! I’m trying to organize notes and things for a writing project and feel like I need a better system to group and visualize my material. is there a particular site, strategy, or program you use for your writing? a timelime with adjustable entry logs would be a gamechanger but I don’t like any of the ones I’ve seen on a superficial search
Hello hello! I am well, I hope you are as well!!
I don't do anything crazy myself, honestly I've tried other things, but I actually do most of my writing, including drafting and notes, just in a single document, even for some of my longer (100k+ stories).
I do have some stories that have multiple docs, but for those just having a file folder with multiple Word documents in it works for me. I use Word 2013 to write, and often will just open two documents side-by-side if I'm doing a rewrite or working off notes. I often put things in notepad as well to have an additional little window. But I, overall, work within a single document and just sorta...roll with it. Most of my organizing is in my head, and then it's in notes that I write in a scatter around the main document for the story.
Also a good old-fashioned bit of pen-and-paper suits me well too, I often write base timelines or draw diagrams physically when necessary. At the end of the day, a timeline is just a bulleted list, which basically any writing program can handle.
That being said, I have tried out a few different writing programs. The types that gamify the writing process never jive with me, and the one I felt was closest to what I want is Scrivner! Scrivner is paid, but there's a trial you can try out. It basically lets you have a bunch of documents related to each other, which makes it easy to write and add notes, and to open things on top of each other and such.
I've also heard decent things about Ellipsus, but haven't looked into it personally myself!
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cherryaire · 7 months ago
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all the people trying to defend the absolute computer illiteracy of gen a blow my mind because do you really think we were taught all the shit we as millennials know about technology in school? no. we fucking learned it ourselves, and that's one of the biggest problems. these kids are refusing to do that and instead of yall telling them they need to do some research and learn just like we did, you coddle them and they don't learn a damn thing.
i could run the internet by myself at six. i sure as hell was not taught that in school. and then i see GA kids thinking all .exe files are evil and not knowing to literally just google the name of a program. as teenagers. and i know yall have access to real computers, too, so there is no excuse for you not knowing how to do this stuff besides refusing to even try and learn it. yes, the rollout of chromebooks fucked with people, but i know without a doubt the kid running games at top graphics on a pc isn't using a damn chromebook. there is no excuse for you to not learn the basics of how to run a PC.
Links: x x x
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Someone insisting we don't learn language intuitively unless homeschooled...Did...did your parents put in you in school at 18 months of age? Did a teacher go around a room of toddlers with a dictionary saying, "This is what 'mama' means"? Because if the answer to that is no--and it is definitely no--you learned language intuitively, like everyone else. The finer points you learn in school, and later on your own, but even as you're doing that, you're still picking up words and phrases just by talking to people and reading.
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hylianengineer · 11 months ago
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I'm working on a podfic! For the summer podfic swap event thingy! It's fun but also kind of exhausting. The fic is 10k words. I am a quarter of the way through it and approaching the 15 minute mark already.
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navramanan · 1 year ago
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school education system in germany is in the gutterrrrr now you got uni students who have no idea how to use excel WHAT
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ooc-miqojak · 1 year ago
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Using a phone is what's clunky. I can accomplish in seconds what takes forever in a phone! You can do multiple processes instead of flipping through tabs on a 2 inch screen. (Plus, then I'm not getting text-neck.) I can flip through multiple tabs in seconds, a single click, instead of pulling open my tiny web browser and opening all my tabs and then clicking. And then, apps aren't plumbing my phone for personal data, either.
And when you get into the work force? You'll be using a desktop. You'll need to know how to use a folder. How to find things quickly on your desktop. You'll need to know shortcuts to quickly accomplish tasks. Command prompts and bios settings and just...right clicking and hitting 'open file location' are all important! You can prefer slower touch screen phones (literally - moving your mouse and clicking is faster, I'm not being pedantic), and the inaccuracy of a touchpad screen that requires multiple attempts to get a word right... but you need to know how to use a PC to get a job... in America, at least. You need to know how to organize your desktop. You need to not just leave everything in the downloads folder, etc.
You also need to realize that 'the Cloud' isn't safe. Putting personal information on the internet isn't safe, and never has been. 'The Cloud' is just someone else's computer. It can be hacked, it can go down, etc - saving important things on a usb or external hard drive is incredibly important if you don't want them to just be gone, or inaccessible one day!
Ultimately, phones have less processing power, less good graphics, and smaller screens - they were intended to be a supplement... not a replacement for desktop PCs. Even laptops aren't as good as having a Desktop PC most of the time! The industry has also tricked people into thinking that building your own PC is hard, because it's cheaper for the consumer to buy parts and build a PC on their own... but it's not a challenge at all these days, especially with guides all over the internet.
With AI on the rise, and Gen Z being left behind/refusing to learn how to use a PC, I'm genuinely worried about their job market being overtaken by AI, since that won't need job training on how to navigate a desktop, or how to use MS Word/Excel. And can you imagine the rising pay for programming jobs, as a whole generation enters the workforce with no idea how to even navigate Windows 10/11... much less how to code? My partner does programming work and its stupid how little work it seems like he does for how much he gets paid, but... the older programmers are retiring, and very few are entering the workforce. So his skills are in high demand... and hilariously/sadly, there's times where a remote call is just him helping an end user navigate their cluttered desktop! Which is FAR from what his job entails.
Phones are objectively clunkier and slower to use - it just feels like a desktop is clunkier because no one taught you how to use it. As someone who has grown up using both kinds of technology at their worst and their best... believe me. Trying to accomplish the same task on my phone just 2 days ago, I gave up bc of how annoying it was, and just went to my computer because it was so much faster! Both things have their merits, but refusing to learn how to use a PC isn't a powermove. It's cutting off your nose to spite your face.
You've got to help yourself, if you weren't taught how to navigate a computer - you've got to ask for help or look up guides, because adulthood is here, and it wants you to have 5 years of experience, and a working knowledge of Miscroft Word and Excel at minimum.
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this can't be true can it
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devopscourses1 · 12 days ago
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Basic Computer Course for Beginners | Learn from Scratch By Kodestree
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tccicomputercoaching · 1 month ago
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Learn MS Office Course – Perfect for Beginners
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In today's competitive world, some computer skills are basic requirements, not optional. When it comes to students, job seekers, and working professionals, being adept in MS Office is one of those must-have skills. TCCI-Tririd Computer Coaching Institute, Ahmedabad has compiled an MS Office course for beginners that are complete, simple, practical, and career-oriented.
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attitudetallyacademy · 3 months ago
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RAM vs ROM: Understanding the Key Differences for Better Tech Knowledge
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ariiiloves · 5 months ago
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Why is college so fucking expensive do they even want me to graduate!?!?!
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